Online Law School for Wisconsin Bar

Without discussing the merits of online law school, I have already decided that's what I will do. I am planning on sitting for the Wisconsin bar. I will get a significant raise at my current job if I have a law degree. So having a substandard degree is not a problem for me. The question is: Which online degree is the quickest and cheapest that Wisconsin will accept? Alternatively, is there another state I should be looking at? Thank you

I may be wrong, but its my understanding that the only state where you can sit for the bar with an online degree is CA. That's because per CA philosophy, anyone regardless of education can take the CA bar. The filter is that it is one of the most difficult bar exams in the nation. That us why all of the online schools are in Cali.

All other states and territories require some kind of education from a school with some kind of state or ABA accreditation. Unless you want to practice in CA, you can't go to an online school. Sorry man.

Without discussing the merits of online law school, I have already decided that's what I will do. I am planning on sitting for the Wisconsin bar. I will get a significant raise at my current job if I have a law degree. So having a substandard degree is not a problem for me. The question is: Which online degree is the quickest and cheapest that Wisconsin will accept? Alternatively, is there another state I should be looking at? Thank you

You can go to an online law school and Practice in California, Vermont, and of course as forementioned Wisconsin. I read today that a person who wants to practice in Wisconsin, can pass any bar in any state, and then practicein Vermont. Vermont won't let you attend an online school, but if you get a valid JD from any school and pass any states bar exam, you can practice in Vermont. That will give you 3 states that will accept online education for lawyers.

Are you saying WI and VT have reciprocity will all states? I was not aware that WI didn't have a bar exam, that's surprising. I know of at least two states that have reciprocity with no one (DE and RI). I was under the impression that reciprocity is a two way street. Can reciprocity be one way? Are you guys sure about this?

Most reciprocity rules require a 5 - 7 years of practice experience before its applicable, btw.

That is a sloppy way of asking: if the OP goes to an online school and sits for the CA bar, which is the only one he can sit for, does he still have to practice 5 - 7 years in CA before he can move, if reciprocity is even available? Don't most states not have reciprocity with CA for precisely this reason?

Wisconsin does have a bar exam, those students that earn their JD at the University of Wisconsin and do not need to take the exam, students who went to law school elsewhere do have to take the bar exam.